The maps in the slideshow linked here show results for statewide North Carolina elections in presidential election years from 1960 to 2008 -- that is, all elections for president and governor and all U.S. Senate elections that occurred in a presidential election year. (Since senators serve six-year terms and each state has two senators, we vote for a senator in two of every three presidential election years.)On each map, counties are colored red, blue, or yellow depending on which party's candidate won a majority of that county's votes. Republican counties are red and Democratic counties are blue, while counties voting for independent candidates or candidates running for "third parties" are colored yellow. Underneath the map is a bar showing the total vote statewide. Candidates are listed if they received at least 1 percent of the statewide vote.The maps will help you to see how voting patterns have changed with time and place.
- North Carolina elections, 1960...œ2008
The maps in this slideshow, drawn from election returns, show how North Carolinians have voted in statewide elections over the past 50 years.
Analyzing the maps
First, read the background essay below the slideshow. Then try to answer these questions.
Geography
- Which regions of the state have most often had Democratic majorities? Republican? Which parts are evenly split or have gone back and forth?
- How consistent have these patterns been -- how much have they changed over time, from election to election? Does this surprise you? Why or why not?
- Can you think of anything in the history, geography, or culture of these parts of the state that would help to explain these voting patterns?
Split tickets
When people vote for candidates of more than one political party in the same election, they're said to split their ticket or ballot. North Carolinians have frequently elected Democrats and Republicans to statewide office in the same year.
- Have North Carolina voters been more likely to vote Republican or Democratic in elections for national office (President and U.S. Senate)? How has this changed over time?
- Have North Carolina voters been more likely to vote Republican or Democratic in elections for governor? How has this changed over time?
- Why might a voter want to vote a straight ticket -- that is, to vote for a single party's candidates? Think of as many reasons as you can.
- Why might voters split their tickets? Think of as many reasons as you can.
- Why might many North Carolinians vote one way in state elections but another in national elections? How might state and national issues or personalities be a factor?
Changes in population
Now, compare the maps of electoral returns to these maps of changing population.
- What counties have most clearly changed their voting patterns? What, if anything, has changed in those counties? How might those changes affect voting patterns?
- Do counties with high urban populations tend to vote Democratic or Republican? Why might that be?
- Do counties with high African American populations tend to vote Democratic or Republican? Why might that be? (Note: The distribution of population by race hasn't changed much over the past forty years, so we didn't include these maps in the slideshow. Use this map for 2000.)
- Look at the maps of elections since 2000. Do counties with high percentages of newcomers tend to vote Democratic or Republican? Why might that be -- do you think it says more about where the newcomers are coming from or about where they're going to? Where might the migrants be coming from? What might attract them to North Carolina?